Word: edenized
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...royalty, and returned to Rome with a photograph of Der Führer inscribed to Countess Ciano in the most complimentary terms. Today, at 33, Count Ciano is the youngest Foreign Minister of any Great Power, six years junior to Great Britain's "handsome young" Foreign Secretary Anthony Eden. Just before leaving Rome last week he was made a general in the Fascist Militia, arrived at Berlin with a gold eagle on his cap and gold epaulets on his shoulders, to be greeted with deafening German hells and an imposing turnout of Wilhelmstrasse officialdom headed by Foreign Minister Baron...
...fateful feature of this meeting that British Foreign Secretary Anthony Eden, officially described as "weakened by his recent attack of chicken pox," had just gone from Geneva to Monte Carlo "to regain his strength"; that Prime Minister Stanley Baldwin was in his third month of "resting in the country"; and that the British Chairman of the International Committee, Treasury Expert William ("Shakespeare") Morrison, was at Geneva...
...notes should suffer the delay of being sent to Rome, Berlin and Lisbon to be answered at leisure; Ambassador Grandi and Prince von Bismarck agreed on second thought to transmit the notes to Rome and Berlin; Lord Plymouth undertook to inform the Portuguese Government; and Foreign Secretary Anthony Eden, who had left Monte Carlo in a hurry, ate a placid lunch in Paris with socialist French Premier Leon Blum. The Frenchman calmed his British guest greatly by saying that Paris would not join Moscow in precipitant intervention to save Madrid but would continue with London to go through the motions...
Meanwhile amid catcalls and cheers, Premier Blum had gone to Geneva full of plans for a new World Economic Conference, but he found British Foreign Secretary Anthony Eden disinclined to listen. Mr. Eden's entourage gave out that the Foreign Secretary, "weakened by chicken pox," was going to spend a week "regaining his strength" on the Riviera...
Divorce the Covenant? In a speech to the Assembly which many delegates called "amazing," the repeated demands of Adolf Hitler that the Covenant of the League of Nations be "divorced" from the Treaty of Versailles of which it is an integral part were seconded by British Foreign Secretary Anthony Eden. He appeared to feel that only by rewriting the Treaty to suit Germany could that country be induced to rejoin the League. "Human life is not static," argued Captain Eden, "but is rather a changing thing." The Assembly last week did nothing about this Eden proposal...